Attakapas Wildlife Management Area

Attakapas Wildlife Management Area
Attakapas Island Wildlife Management Area
IUCN category V (protected landscape/seascape)
Map showing the location of Attakapas Wildlife Management Area
Location within Louisiana
Location St. Mary, St. Martin, and Iberia Parishes, Louisiana
Coordinates 29°56′34″N 91°27′46″W / 29.94278°N 91.46278°W / 29.94278; -91.46278Coordinates: 29°56′34″N 91°27′46″W / 29.94278°N 91.46278°W / 29.94278; -91.46278
Area 27,962 acres (113.16 km2)
Established 1976
Governing body State of Louisiana through the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries

Attakapas Wildlife Management Area, also known as Attakapas Island Wildlife Management Area, is a 27,962 acre tract of protected area located in St. Mary, St. Martin, and Iberia Parishes, Louisiana. The property was acquired in 1976 and is under the authority of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF).[1] The LDWF has 25,730 acres and the USACOE has 2,200 acres.

Description

The WMA is located NNE of Jeanerette and Charenton, east of the west Atchafalaya Basin Spillway levee. The Atchafalaya River runs almost through the middle. The WMA is actually located on several islands with Bayou Chene on the west and West Grand Lake and East Grand Lake on the east. The northern boundary is the Texaco pipeline and the southern boundary is a three prong point with West Grand Lake on the west side, Thibodaux Chute in the center (above Cypress Island), and an area south of Blue Point (and Blue Point Chute) east of Tiger Island known as Willow Cove.

Destination points of hunters and fishermen on the west side of the Atchafalaya are Mud Cove (Iberia Parish), Rogers Cove, Miller Chute, Crew Boat Chute, Raymonds Cove, Goat Island, Myette Pointe, and San Diego Cut, in St. Mary Parish, along with part of Grassy Lake, that is on the east side of the river. There is a tract of land east of the Atchafalaya opposite Mud Cove in Iberia Parish and south of that is Schwing Cove, Schwing Chute, and an Exxon pipeline runs diagonal east to west through the area that is in St. Martin Parish. Union Oil #1 and #2 are both located south of Grassy Lake.[2]

Restoration

In 1999 Hunt Oil installed a water control structure with some minor levee repairs when extending Crew Boat Chute. The improvements will increase moist-soil production with favorable water levels for early migratory waterfowl as well as wintering waterfowl.[3]

Feral Pigs

Several WMA's have feral hog problems and they are considered a nuisance. Attakapas as well as Clear Creek, Dewey Wills, Little River, Pearl River, Richard K. Yancey, Sabine, Sabine Island, and West Bay WMAs, allow hog hunting in February with a self-clearing permit. Jackson-Bienville was on the list but was removed as a WMA.[4]

See also

List of Louisiana Wildlife Management Areas

References

  1. Attakapas WMA- Retrieved 2017-02-19
  2. Attakapas WMA map- Retrieved 2017-02-19
  3. Crew Boat Chute enhancement- Retrieved 2017-02-19
  4. feral hog problems- Retrieved 2017-02-19
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.